It Always Ends The Same Way: Crisis, Crash, Collapse
June 23, 2021
Risk has not been extinguished, it is expanding geometrically beneath the
false stability of a monstrously manipulated market.
One of the most under-appreciated investment insights is courtesy of Mike Tyson:
"Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth." At this moment in history,
the plan of most market participants is to place their full faith and trust in the status quo's
ability to keep asset prices lofting ever higher, essentially forever.
In other words, the vast majority of punters are convinced they will never suffer the indignity
of getting punched in the mouth by a market crash. What makes this confidence so interesting
is massively distorted markets always end the same way: crisis, crash and collapse.
The core dynamic here is distorted markets provide false feedback and misleading information
which then lead to participants making catastrophically misguided decisions. Investment decisions
made on poor information will also be poor, leading participants to end up poor, to their very
great surprise.
The surprise comes from the falsity of the feedback, as those who are
distorting markets want punters to believe "the market" is functioning transparently. If you're
manipulating the market, the last thing you want is for the unwary marks to discover that the
market is generating false signals and misleading information on risk, as knowing the market
is being distorted would alert them to the extraordinary risks intrinsic to heavily distorted
markets.
The risks arise from the disconnect between the precariousness of the manipulated market
and the extreme confidence punters have in its stability and predictability. The predictability
comes not from transparent feedback and market signals but from the manipulation. This stability
is entirely fabricated and therefore it lacks the dynamic stability of truly open markets.
Markets that are being distorted/manipulated to achieve a goal that is impossible in truly
open markets--for example, markets that only loft higher with near-zero volatility--lull participants
into a dangerous perception that because markets are so stable, risk has dissipated.
In actuality, risk is skyrocketing beneath the surface of the artificial stability because the
market has been stripped of the mechanisms of dynamic stability. This artificial stability
derived from sustained manipulation has the superficial appearance of low-risk markets, i.e.,
low levels of volatility, but this lack of volatility derives not from transparency but from
behind-the-scenes suppression of volatility.
Another source of risk in distorted markets is the illusion of liquidity: in low-volume
markets of suppressed volatility, participants are encouraged
to believe that they can buy and sell whatever securities they want in whatever volumes they want
without disturbing market pricing and liquidity. In other words, participants are led to believe
that the market will always have a bid due to the near-infinite depth of liquidity: no matter how
many billions of dollars of securities you want to sell, there will always be a bid for your shares.
In actual fact, the bid is paper-thin and it vanishes altogether once selling rises above very
low levels. Heavily manipulated markets are exquisitely sensitive to selling because the
entire point is to limit any urge to sell while encouraging the greed to increase gains by buying more.
The illusions of low risk, essentially guaranteed gains for those who increase their positions
and near-infinite liquidity generate overwhelming incentives to borrow
more and leverage it to the hilt to maximize gains. The blissfully delusional punter
feels the decision to borrow the maximum available and leverage it to the maximum is entirely
rational due to the "obvious" absence of risk, the "obvious" guaranteed gains offered by markets
lofting ever higher like clockwork and the "obvious" abundance of liquidity, assuring the punter
they can always sell their entire position at today's prices and lock in profits at any time.
On top of all these grossly misleading distortions, punters have been encouraged to believe
in the ultimate distortion: the Federal Reserve will never let markets decline again, ever.
This is the perfection of moral hazard: risk has been disconnected from consequence.
In this perfection of moral hazard, punters consider it entirely rational to increase
extremely risky speculative bets because the Federal Reserve will never let markets decline.
Given the abundant evidence behind this assumption, it would be irrational not to ramp up
crazy-risky speculative bets to the maximum because losses are now impossible thanks to the Fed's
implicit promise to never let markets drop.
This is why distorted, manipulated markets always end the same way: first, in
an unexpected emergence of risk, which was presumed to be banished; second, a market crash
as the paper-thin bid disappears and prices flash-crash to levels that wipe out all those
forced to sell by margin calls, and then the collapse of faith in the manipulators (the Fed),
collapse of the collateral supporting trillions of dollars in highly leveraged debt and
then the collapse of the entire delusion-based financial system.
Gordon Long and I illuminate the many layers of distortion, manipulation and moral hazard
in our new video presentation,
It Always Ends The Same Way (34:33). Amidst the ruins generated by well-meaning
manipulation and distortion, the "well meaning" part will leave an extremely long-lasting
bitter taste in all those who failed to differentiate between the false signals and distorted
information of manipulated markets and the trustworthy transparency of signals arising in
truly open markets.
In summary: risk has not been extinguished, it is expanding geometrically beneath the
false stability of a monstrously manipulated market. As I often note here, risk cannot
be extinguished, it can only be transferred. By distorting markets to create an illusion
of low-risk stability, the Federal Reserve has transferred this fatal supernova of risk to
the entire financial system.
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